“It’s really hard because sometimes I think I come down like a hammer,” Sorvino told People about discussing the topic with her children. “And my daughter finds it overwhelming. Like, ‘Mom, I was having a nice night before you started talking about this again. I’m fine, I’m safe.'”

Sorvino — who won both an Academy Award and Golden Globe in the Best Supporting Actress category for her role in 1995′s “Mighty Aphrodite” — added that she’s “such a worrywart now and so hell-bent on nothing bad happening to my kids that I maybe have become too much of a broken record.”

“I know that although I’ve had these bad experiences it doesn’t mean that those are going to befall them,” Sorvino told People. “I work with my boys too, and talk about consent, even things like tickling or teasing people who don’t want to be teased. Like if it’s only fun for you, it’s not fun.”

Since Sorvino spoke of the sexual misconduct she suffered at the hands of Weinstein, she publicly called for former California Gov. Jerry Brown to sign five anti-sexual harassment bills into law last year. He signed three of them.